(Bloomberg) — US chipmakers are struggling to fill key positions, a new study shows, as a shortage of skilled labor threatens to hobble efforts to revive the domestic industry.
(Bloomberg) — US chipmakers are struggling to fill key positions, a new study shows, as a shortage of skilled labor threatens to hobble efforts to revive the domestic industry.
It’s taking semiconductor firms more than twice as long as their peers in other industries to hire personnel such as technicians or mechanical engineers, with the typical process stretching to about three months, according to an analysis of the top 50 chip producers in the US by Revelio Labs, a labor-market data analyst.
That’s ominous news for President Joe Biden’s administration, which is pumping $52 billion into the country’s chip industry in a bid to reduce reliance on Asian supply chains and deliver thousands of jobs. The subsidies are already galvanizing a wave of investment across the US, but a hiring bottleneck could slow progress.
Chipmakers have long sounded the alarm that the US doesn’t have enough job candidates with a background in science, technology and engineering. The firms are on course to add 115,000 jobs by 2030, according to the Semiconductor Industry Association — but at current degree completion rates, the group says, nearly three-fifths of those jobs could remain unfilled.
Read more: Chip Industry Sees Labor Shortages Threatening US Expansion Plan
Already, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. has pushed back the proposed start of production at its Arizona plant, citing a lack of construction workers with the expertise to install highly technical equipment. The firm plans to send staff from its Taiwanese facilities to train local workers, executives said on an earnings call last month.
“A lot of people that you talk to within this industry — when you ask them, ‘Hey, what is the thing that you’re most worried about?’ — it’s workforce development,” said Kate Dei Cas, who heads the delivery systems and services business at EMD Electronics, a semiconductor materials and equipment supplier. “How am I gonna hire the people to be able to build these factories? How am I gonna hire the people to be able to run these factories?”
EMD was able to fill around 75 positions at a new plant in Chandler, Arizona through one mass hiring event, Dei Cas said — but that’s a far cry from the number of workers sought by EMD customers for huge fabrication facilities, she added. TSMC, for example, needs some 4,500 workers. Intel Corp., for its new plant in Ohio, will need 3,000.
The industry association has been pushing for immigration reform that would allow more people who come to the US for college to stay in the country. But the issue is one of the most intractable subjects in Washington, so the odds of a near-term deal look slim.
Meanwhile, firms are partnering with trade schools, community colleges and universities to develop training programs, and the Commerce Department has said it’ll evaluate workforce development efforts as part of the application process for chip funding.
A recent survey by career-services website Handshake, touted at a recent event with Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, showed a nearly 80% surge in applications for full-time entry-level semiconductor jobs, and a 40% bump in internship opportunities.
Among the 50 firms studied by Revelio, the share of job postings that are based in the US climbed sharply last year after the passage of Biden’s CHIPS and Science Act to support the industry. Texas led the expansion of hiring, followed by North Carolina and New York.
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